Greenhaven: A Pagan Tradition

  • Home
    • About Us >
      • Highlights: Greenhaven in Brief
      • Floodlights: Greenhaven in Depth
      • Our Facilities
      • Words To Live By
    • Our Voices >
      • Activities in a Nutshell
      • The Heart and Soul of Greenhaven
      • Memories of Samhain 2004
      • Janet's Wild Ride: First Esbat
  • Activities
    • Classes >
      • Year-and-a-Day Class
      • Stone Magic Class >
        • Lesson 1: Introduction to Stone Magic
        • Lesson 2: Stone Magic Applications
        • Lesson 3: Shapes and Settings
        • Lesson 4: The Symbolism of Stones
        • Lesson 5: Metals and Their Meanings
        • Lesson 6: Acquiring Magical Artifacts
        • Lesson 7: A Guide to Magical Stones
    • Cooking Feasts >
      • How to Host a Potluck Feast
      • Litha Recipes
      • Lammas Recipes
      • Mabon Recipes
      • Samhain Recipes
      • Yule Recipes
      • Imbolc Recipes
      • Ostara Recipes
      • Beltane Recipes
    • Crafts >
      • PVC Drum-making Workshop
      • Scrapbook of Shadows >
        • Part 1: Introduction to Scrapbooking
        • Part 2: What Is a Scrapbook?
        • Part 3: Why Are Scrapbooks Important?
        • Part 4: Tools and Supplies
        • Part 5: Scrapbook Planning
        • Part 6: Scrapbook Creation
        • Part 7: Glossary
        • Part 8: Recommended Resources
    • Esbats >
      • Esbat Rituals
    • Sabbats >
      • Litha
      • Lammas
      • Mabon
      • Samhain
      • Yule
      • Imbolc
      • Ostara
      • Beltane
  • Resources
    • Links
    • Recommended Reading Lists
  • Sitemap
  • Writing
    • Composing Magic >
      • Discussion Questions
      • Reviews of CM
      • Table of Contents
      • Worksheets
    • Essays & Articles >
      • All Hail Hypatia
      • Concepts of Evil
      • Cyberspace as an Out of Body Experience
      • Erishkegal: Goddess of Thankless Tasks
      • Expecting the Best in Pagan Leadership
      • Guides for the Urban Pagan
      • How to Deal with Magic Interfering inTechnology
      • How to Start a Pagan Club
      • Magic in Animated Movies
      • Magical Safety & Skill Development
      • Monotheism vs. Polytheism in Contemporary Paganism
      • The Pagan Vocation
      • Secrets of the Inner Circle
      • Totems, History, and Evolutionary Complexity
      • Witches, Fire, and Other Dangerous Things
    • Poetry >
      • Air Beyond Breath
      • And He Is the Moon Too
      • The Balance of the Wheel
      • Before Their Time
      • Beltane Faery Drum Jam
      • The Breath of Spring
      • Brigid's Braid
      • Bringing Beltane
      • Cornerstones
      • Craftwise
      • Dancing with Stones
      • Dragon Mother
      • The Dreamgod
      • The Eye of Mímisbrunnr
      • Firewheel
      • The God of the Waning Year
      • The Grain of the Gods
      • Her name
      • Invocation to Agayu
      • Invocation to the Sun in Glory
      • A Mother's Prayer
      • My Lover, Boreas
      • Red Moon Rising
      • The Rite Way
      • The Shells That Speak
      • Song of the Seasons
      • The Spring-Fed Spirit
      • Staff of Sun and Wand of Song
      • Summoning for the Feast of Ancestors
      • Vacillations
      • The Waters of Hades
      • What the Bards' Songs Say
      • a Witch's garden
      • With Every Fine and Subtle Sense Perceive
  • Havenspeak
  • Sample
 

Lesson 5: Metals and Their Meanings

Picture
Like stones, metals also possess magical qualities.  Gold, silver, and copper are the most common metals used in jewelry and other mystical objects.  Gold has a powerful but somewhat aloof aura, with a solar/masculine tone; this metal suggests purity, wealth, virtue, and permanence.  It grants protection and longevity.  This very soft, easily worked metal was among the first that humans learned how to use.  It appears on many magical and sacred items in historic and modern times.  For mystical purposes, peridot yields the greatest strength when set in gold.  Ancient alchemists used to seek ways of turning base metals, like lead, into gold.

Silver has an equally powerful but more accessible aura, with a lunar/feminine tone; this metal suggests fluidity, intuition, and transformation.  It is also the metal most receptive to magical imprints or programming – like psychic SillyPutty.  To keep silver from picking up too much “junk” energy, you can loop a bit of silver wire around a quartz crystal and store that in the case with your silver jewelry.  This will soak up impressions and keep the other silver magically clean.  It’s easier to take out the wrapped quartz and purify it once a month, than to be stuck cleaning your whole silver collection.

Copper, a lively conductor of electricity, has a feminine aura.  It works well for balancing the body’s energies, attracting love, bringing luck, or maintaining health.  Copper is sacred to Venus.  Sometimes it’s used for an athame blade or a wand, because it directs energy so well.  The best place to wear copper is on the side opposite your dominant hand; copper bracelets are a good choice and easy to find.

Other metals occasionally show up in jewelry too.  Brass and bronze sometimes substitute for gold, magically speaking; they convey protection and carry a similar solar/masculine tone.  While similar to silver in its ability to hold a magical charge, platinum is a bit more assertive, which makes it less inclined to pick up random impressions.  Iron sometimes appears in novelties made of horseshoe nails or in the form of meteorites, both of which have strong magical associations of their own; this metal conveys splendid protection and also works well for binding, dispelling, or grounding purposes.

Ideally, the setting of magical jewelry should have an opening in the back or bottom to allow skin contact with the gem.  Too much base metal in the setting can make it less suitable for magical work by diluting the energy.  The style should also evoke the desired goal – perhaps a dragon to grant courage or a regular knotwork pattern to balance energy flows.  The setting may also reflect the body part in need of attention, like feet for speed, to employ the sympathetic magic of similarity.  Traditional symbols such as pentacles, trefoils, stars, and spirals are ideal setting motifs for a Pagan’s stone that will be used for many different purposes.



Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
Photo used under Creative Commons from Social Butterfly Jewellery